![]() Look at the "install" path at the URL opera://about.)Īlso, if you're testing a download between Chrome and Opera, goto the URL chrome://downloads, select the URL of the actual download, copy it, and paste that URL in the address field of the other browser and press enter to initiate the download. (Adjust the path to your Opera's launcher.exe. ![]() To do this (example for Windows), close Opera, open a command prompt, and open Opera with this command: "C:\Users\yourusername\AppData\Local\Programs\Opera GX\launcher.exe" "-user-agent=Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0 Win64 圆4) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/110.0.0.0 Safari/537.36" You can set Opera to pretend to be Chrome to see if the server is serving the download to Opera at a slower rate on purpose. ![]() You can disable your extensions one by one to see if an extension is causing the slow download speeds. You can test if the real-time protection of your anti-virus is interfering with Opera though by temporarily disabling it. You can also test with Opera's adblocker off, but that would be weird if it caused any slow downloads.īesides that, there shouldn't be any difference as Opera uses the same Chromium networking code that Chrome uses. And, if you're running on battery, make sure you don't have Opera's battery saver turned on. ![]() Further, make sure you don't have any limiters turned on at all. Burnout426 Volunteer last edited by Make sure you're not using Opera's VPN and make sure you don't have the net limiter turned on in the GX Control sidebar panel. ![]()
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